Title:Women and private military and security companies
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Author(s):VRDOLJAK, Ana FilipaDate:2011Citation:Francesco FRANCIONI and Natalino RONZITTI (eds), War by contract : human rights, humanitarian law and private contractors, Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2011, pp. 280-298Version:Published version of EUI AEL WP 2009/22Type:Contribution to bookAbstract:Lack of clarity about the application of international law norms and inadequacies of existing regulatory regimes covering private military and security companies (PMSCs) have reinforced concerns about transparency and ...

Title:Women in Europe and in the world : the State of the Union 2016
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Author(s):RUBIO MARIN, RuthDate:2016Citation:International journal of constitutional law, 2016, Vol. 14, No. 3, pp. 545-554Type:ArticleSeries/Number:[State of the Union Keynote Address]; [2016]Abstract:Building on the definition of oppression developed by the philosopher Iris Young, the article argues that women in Europe are an oppressed group. Relying on recent statistics, it points out that a high percentage of women ...

Title:Women's Human Rights: Guaranteed by Universal Standards or Discounted by Cultural Bias?
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Author(s):CHINKIN, ChristineDate:1997Citation:Academy of European Law (ed.), The Protection of Human Rights in Europe, The Hague/Boston/London, Kluwer Law International/Martinus Nijhoff Publishers / Florence, Academy of European Law, European University Institute, 1997, Collected Courses of the Academy of European Law, 1994, V/2, 11-58Type:Contribution to bookSeries/Number:Collected Courses of the Academy of European Law; [AEL]

Title:Women, law and medical power
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Author(s):SHELDON, SallyDate:1997Citation:Patty IRELAND and Per LALENG (eds), Critical lawyers' handbook : volume 2, London : Pluto, 1997, Law and social theory, pp. 133-141Type:Contribution to book

Title:Worldly ambitions : foreign policy objectives in European constitutional law
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Author(s):LARIK, JorisDate:2013Citation:Florence : European University Institute, 2013Type:ThesisSeries/Number:EUI PhD theses; Department of LawAbstract:Constitutions of today do not merely address the salus populi anymore, the welfare of the people, but increasingly exhibit international ambitions. This is true in particular for the EU Treaties. To make sense of these ...